House of Lords kicks off Brexit bill debate under the watchful eye of PM Theresa May

Brexit
|20.02.2017

With the Brexit bill debate under way, UK PM Theresa May has warned parliament against delaying Brexit talks. In an unusual move, May also attended the House of Lords, where she sat on the steps of the queen's throne.

Urging the Lords to follow the lead of the Commons by neither amending nor delaying the bill, May said she didn't "want to see anybody holding up what the British people want ... which is for us to deliver Brexit, to leave the European Union."

EU divorce

The legislation gives May the right to trigger Article 50, effectively beginning up to two years of formal divorce negotiations with Brussels, which were prompted by last June's EU referendum when 52 percent of voters favored leaving the 28-member bloc.

The Conservative government presented the short bill after losing a high-profile court battle in which judges ruled that May must have parliament's consent before beginning the UK's departure from the EU. Taking the bill to the House of Lords is the final step in that process.

Long weeks ahead

May (in the background, center) made a rare trip to the Lords to oversee proceedings

In an unusual but not unprecedented move for a prime minister, May made her presence felt on Monday as she also attended the debate at the House of Lords, sitting at the steps to the monarch's throne.

Following the "Second Reading" of the bill on Monday and Tuesday, the legislation will then enter the "Committee stage," scheduled for February 27 and March 1. During this stage any amendments will by discussed and may be voted on.

A third reading is then due to take place on March 7 during which the final wording of the legislation will be debated, before the bill is returned to the Commons with any amendments, most likely by the week commencing March 13.